It will ferment dry.It tastes sweet but will this referment? If not, will it prevent bottle carbonation? It's a one gallon cider with 71b. From local orchard. Thinking probably 3/4 cup,it's 20 percent A/V liqueur.
Hmmm. Really? How is it sweet now and not fermenting? It's store bought liqueur.It will ferment dry.
Liquer is a distilled product, leaving behind any yeast and microbes from fermentation process. Hence, no fermentation. That, and the high alcohol will tend to inhibit microbes that do get in there.Hmmm. Really? How is it sweet now and not fermenting? It's store bought liqueur.
That's what I thought. So if i top off with 1 cup or less I should still be able to bottle carbonate, correct?Liquer is a distilled product, leaving behind any yeast and microbes from fermentation process. Hence, no fermentation. That, and the high alcohol will tend to inhibit microbes that do get in there.
Yes.That's what I thought. So if i top off with 1 cup or less I should still be able to bottle carbonate, correct?
Groovy!Yes.
Yes, I'm adding priming sugar at bottling. So theoretically a little non fermentable sweetness.This may be me but it is a little unclear how you intend to prime this cider. Will the yeast be able to ferment the sugars in the liqueur? I could be wrong but i don't think that they can do that even if the final total ABV is within the tolerance of the yeast. I suspect that you may need to add some more sugar to the solution that they yeast can more easily get at but as I say, I don't know
unless you reach the yeasts abv limit or the liquor has weird sweeteners inside, there won't be any residual sweetness.Yes, I'm adding priming sugar at bottling. So theoretically a little non fermentable sweetness.
So are we saying liqueur is fermentable?That is the question I guess.unless you reach the yeasts abv limit or the liquor has weird sweeteners inside, there won't be any residual sweetness.
So are we saying liqueur is fermentable?
Wow! Ok then maybe very little to no priming sugar then? hmmm.Very. I made a chocolate porter somethingorother some time ago and used a bottle (minus a shot or two) of Creme de Cacao to prime. It did the trick. You do have to wait a few weeks for the hot flavor to subside though. After that it was really tasty.
So are we saying liqueur is fermentable?That is the question I guess.
Ok, gotcha. Looks like dry sparkling cider or sulfite and sorbate still sweetish cider.The sugar in liquor is fermentable, as much as any sugar is. The difference to any sugar is that the sugar in liquor is in solution with a high alcohol amount which inhibits yeast. By mixing it with the cider, you are thinning the alcohol amount below the abv thershhold that would inhibit yeast, therefore it ferments dry.
There's another option if you bottle and want both a fizzy and semi-sweet product. Do a search in this section of the forum for 'stove top pasteurization' and 'cooler pasteurization'. I backsweeten and prime both my ciders and Grafs , then cooler pasteurize 4-7 days later when they're ready. Works well.Ok, gotcha. Looks like dry sparkling cider or sulfite and sorbate still sweetish cider.
So are we saying liqueur is fermentable?That is the question I guess.
@Miraculix mostly said it, liquor is not fermentable, but diluted into cider puts the abv in a fermentable range: assuming it is a fermentable sugar.So are we saying liqueur is fermentable?That is the question I guess.
It's a cheap off brand,very little info on label.flavored Canadian whisky? So ill top off secondary and if get a little fermentation that's ok,ill wait. I may sorbate and sulfite and bottle still cider.@Miraculix mostly said it, liquor is not fermentable, but diluted into cider puts the abv in a fermentable range: assuming it is a fermentable sugar.
But we have assumptions, not facts. What liquor are you planning to use and what if anything is it sweetened from?
What yeast did you use?
What was og/fg?
Sorbate/sulfate?
My opinion is subjective since I've never done this. Sounds like a solid plan.It's a cheap off brand,very little info on label.flavored Canadian whisky? So ill top off secondary and if get a little fermentation that's ok,ill wait. I may sorbate and sulfite and bottle still cider.
Thanks S-Met.My opinion is subjective since I've never done this. Sounds like a solid plan.
I may suggest: when you transfer to secondary, take a gravity reading and taste your sample. Then add measured amounts of the liquor until it tastes correct.
You could also take gravity of the liquor to get a rough idea of potential alcohol.
I think I was also intending to say:Thanks S-Met.
Update"I think I was also intending to say:
You can always add more but you cannot add less.
Yep, this is correct. It did start fermenting, and is going as I write this. Glad I didn't bottle yet. So lesson learned.It might have residual sugar but a high ABV. (kinda like a port wine)
When you add the liquor to the cider the ABV will be lower and any living yeast will start eating that sugar.